Above the Line

I did my day backwards. Starting from a reflective, quiet experience, I ended with a quarreling barrel of noise and anger that fueled the Trump victory.

Story of my life at the moment. Escaping into art before being forced into reality.

Agnes Martin made over 600 paintings exploring emptiness, energy, seeing, and surprisingly, joy.

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The show at the Guggenheim opens with this oddly shaped room hung with the entire ethereal series Islands I – XII from 1979. Here in Martin’s signature style, the paintings explore light and form and formlessness. She challenges us to slow down and look in order to really see. This is the work of art. To make us slow down and think, feel, remember, dream, and aspire.Martin wants you to experience innocence, freedom, perfection attained and resisted.

Here shapes emerge. Stripes of pale blue and gray. Pencil lines. All revealed up close and melt away at a distance. The pieces unite and converse, push against each other for space. They look stunning with the architecture.

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Martin explained that she works in a meditative way, emptying her mind and waiting for inspiration. For her, inspiration is emotional, and the intellect does not produce artwork. So despite what you see, her works are not minimalist, mathematical explorations of line, color, shape. You can see the artist’s hand.

Loving Love, 1999

Untitled, 2004

painterly detail

painterly detail

Instead emotion fills her intention, and she argues the work, like the Abstract Expressionists. And not just any emotion.

Loving Love, 1999

Loving Love, 1999

Martin says she draws a line and chooses to live above the line, with happiness, beauty, and love. By this approach, I’ve been living below the line since the election. After 9/11, art pulled me above the line. I don’t know what will this time.

Going to the Jewish Museum certainly wasn’t the answer. Although ostensibly I went for the John Singer Sargent portrait on loan, aching for his bravura splashes of color after the austere monochromes of Martin.

But I was literally swept into the bright noise of Take Me (I’m Yours). This democratic space lets artists express in the moment, and the below-the-line anger oozed through the rooms.

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With objects to take ranging from pills to lemon water and t-shirts and ribbons to words on paper and words on the wall, I filled the bag provided. My bright yellow ribbon states “It is not enough to be compassionate” in hot pink serif letters. This was the cleanest saying hung for the taking.

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The t-shirt: “freedom cannot be simulated.”

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What tore my heart open was the poster created by Jonathan Horowitz before Election Day. I couldn’t bear to take one, although it was probably the most popular object in the exhibit. Now who’s face will join the portraits?

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Martin’s Taoism that had so calmed and uplifted me vanished immediately.

I don’t know why I decided to follow through on my ticket purchase for Lynn Nottage’s “Sweat.” But I went and found the violent yelling and seething racism of working class plant workers  just more than I could take.

Yes, the play was written and even opened before the election. I bought my ticket when I could assume my pedestal height to empathize with their struggles for work, which in my privileged way I share, so a connection. I couldn’t make it past intermission.

I get it: working class white America is angry. Now liberal America is angry. What do we do with all this anger? How can we get back above the line?

Untitled, 1960, looks like a textile

Untitled, 1960, looks like a textile

Or do we need to blur the lines or weave the lines? Try something new?

detail; see each one of us showing up

detail; see each one of us showing up

 

 

Remarkable Minds

Being in the mind of the boy with Asperger’s Syndrome from “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime” is amazing, nightmarish, poetic, angry, funny, noisy, harrowing, despairing, and remarkable–sometimes all at the same time.  I wondered how the book would get staged, and it’s a thing of chaotic beauty and wonder.  The staging with its ever-flexible grid set and the acting are breathtaking.  We are inside his mind, and his mind becomes his body, lifted, swung, tumbled, hurtled, crouching, collapsing.

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My seat was on the left center aisle on the first row.  I saw the goosebumps on the boy’s arm and could have stroked that arm as he squatted right in front  of me, in a quiet moment.  Close enough to see a tear smear his eye.  This boy wasn’t acting.  He was Christopher.  At the end when he asks, “can I do anything?” three yearning times with no answer from the other actor before the blackout, I wanted to scream “yes!”

This is some piece of theater, and if you want to amplify the experience, take in the powerful show of Norman Lewis and Lee Krasner at the Jewish Museum.

 

Norman Lewis, Twilight Sounds, 1947

Norman Lewis, Twilight Sounds, 1947

 

Their calligraphic paintings especially work like Christopher’s mind.  Lewis’ lines are almost dainty in their expression, while Krasner deliciously glopped and carved the paint on her ironically carefully-constructed compositions.

Lee Krasner,  Stop and Go, 1949

Lee Krasner, Stop and Go, 1949

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Many think she taught her husband Jackson Pollack a thing or two about painting.

Lee Krasner, Noon, 1947

Lee Krasner, Noon, 1947

 

And given these works from the late 1940s, before Pollack’s breakthrough paintings in the 1950s, you can see how.  Like so many others, she back-seated her career for his craziness, and we’re not better as a result.
 

 

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Lee Krasner, Untitled, 1949

 

 

 

 

Still you can revel in the works of this small show and enter the worlds of all of these remarkable minds.

Lee Krasner, Self-Portrait, 1939

Lee Krasner, Self-Portrait, 1939

 

Lightning Strikes

The Jewish Museum just opened its Jack Goldstein exhibit, and when I went today, I was the only person (yes, really), the only person there.  Now, I’m not going to tell you to rush out and see it, given all the other big exhibits right now.  Maybe Punk at the Met is more your style.

But if you do go, you may want to linger at his videos, which as part of the “Pictures Generation,” are what put him on the map.

Goldstein - Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Frankly, wall text like this below had me pretty puzzled.

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You can double click on this photo to get a larger image.  And I’d appreciate it if you’d explain it to me.

What I really liked were his enormous paintings.  Check these out.

Jack Goldstein, Untitled, 1981
Goldstein - Untitled
Jack Goldstein, Untitled, 1983

This one and the lightning painting below remind me of photographs of Walter de Maria’s lightning fields.  Don’t you think?

The Goldstein Painting
Walter de Maria, photograph of the Lightning Field

The Goldstein paintings are starkly beautiful.  Maybe you’d like to go out to New Mexico and see the real thing.  Wouldn’t that be amazing?